Aizawl, May 2 : Over 600 pigs have died from swine fever and about
12,200 have been infected in the past two months in Mizoram, officials
said here Wednesday.

“The endemic swine fever caused
the death of as many as 470 pigs in Aizawl district alone while
remaining 130 died in other districts. Over 12,200 pigs have been
infected with the disease,” a Mizoram animal husbandry and veterinary
department official told reporters.

The northeastern state shares border with Myanmar and Bangladesh.

Over
300 piglets, given to the people under the new land use policy, a
Mizoram government flagship scheme to rehabilitate the poor people in
permanent cultivation, have also died from swine fever, also called hog
cholera.

The animal husbandry and veterinary
department had earlier in March asked all the deputy commissioners of
the state’s eight districts, specially those adjoining Myanmar, to issue
orders banning import of pigs from neighbouring Myanmar.

According
to the official, the PRRS (porcine reproductive and respiratory
syndrome), which was much more dangerous than the swine fever, also hit
Mizoram and was spreading in Myanmar and there has been an epidemic-like
situation in that country.

“After preliminary
positive test of swine fever in Mizoram laboratories, the samples have
been sent to the Bhopal-based High Security Animal Disease Laboratory
for final confirmation,” the official added.

Restrictions
of the past two months by the administration on selling “affected pork”
would continue in the mountainous state until the situation normalises,
officials said.

The sale of pork also dropped
rapidly. Chicken and beef have been substituting the menu in marriage
parties and other feasts in the Christian-dominated state.

Taking advantage of the situation, the dealers and meat vendors have almost doubled the prices of chicken and beef.

Mizoram has international border of 404 km with Myanmar and 318 km with Bangladesh.